Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, February 8, 1912, Page 4

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Maud Muller Tonight, Brinkman {i: High Class Vaudeville and Moving Pictures March —*‘My Old Girl” . By William Cutty Ward & Maning Harmony Singing and Different Dancers “Maud Muller” A beautiful production of Whittier's imortal poem. Selig motion picture. “The Maiden of the Piefaced In- " dian” Edison Moticn Picture “‘Western Hearts” A dramatic epoch of the Colorado Foothills. Selig motion picture, Illustrated Song By Miss Gladys Byerley Overture—*‘Barber of Seville”’ Byf} Rossine 5S¢, 10c and 15¢ Continous Admission Show Starts 7:10 N THE NOTICE. ! Bemidji Auto Club Meeting. | CANARY AN ARDENT MOTORIST | There will be a meeting of the Be- mid)i Auto Club at the Commercial Club rooms Friday evening, Feb. 9. Atlanta Man Has a Bird That Ha Traveled More Than 20,000 Miles in Automobile. Meeting to be called td order at 8 o'clock sharp. Many dogs and cats regularly re- tome very important matters to be| ceive their airings in motor cars and | taken up, one especially which is| have shown distinct preference for | ptodaliy of more importance than| these rides, but a canary bird is the any (ne question which wiil come | latest addition to the ranks of motor- bciore the club this season. The writ- | 18t8. Dick Levl of Atlanta, Ga., is the par- ticular canary that has the distinc- tion of being the first in this field and he is said to have traveled over twen- ty thousand miles in a motor car. J. E. Levi of Atlanta tells an interesting story of Dick. Dick’s first ride in an automobile was in a Premier 24, bought by Mr. Levi in Philadelphia in 1906. Dick was one year old at iNATURALlST ON THE SLUMS/ that time, and with Mr. and Mrs. Levl er urges and earnestly requests all ! members to be present, also any one intevested in good roads will fine i 1 interest to attend. |-~ Demidji Auto Club, | C. W. Jewett, President his mileage around Philadelphia, in- Dr. Hornaday Gives Some Sound Ad-| cluding several trips to Boston, was vice to Young Women Tourists | ten thousand miles. - | From the West. The three motorists made a-trip of i —_— twelve hundred miles from Boston to A short time ago a party of young | Atlanta in October, 1906, being the women tourists from the west visited | firat to cover this route in a motor the New York zoological park and|car. They went by way of Baltimore called on Dr. Hornaday, to whom they ‘and Philadelphia over the mountains, had a letter of introduction. The di-| #long the Southern railway. On sev- rector personally conducted their ip-|/eral occasions they were out all nighat spection of the park, answered their [ in their car, sleeping by the roadside. rattling fire of questions and placed | Mr. Levi says they spent three weeks | at their disposal so far as possible his | In a constant rain during this trip, all vast fund of information on topics in | the time running on low gear. Mr. | his line. As they were about to leave | Levi is almost always accompanied by | he surprised them by giving them | Mrs. Ldvi, who is also an expert at some advice in a different direction | the wheel of a car, and Dick is always NEW ARRIVALS Spring goods here in great the latest to arrive are dress goods, W ash goods, Lac- es, Embroideries, variety, Muslin underwear, Hair goods, Bags, Belts, Combs and Necklaces. 0'Leary--Bowser Co. ——————————————————————————————————————————————————————— S e and of a noture that visitors to New i the third member of the part: York do not usuali.recoive 0 i Ei | “Now, girls,” he said, “of course you | that they .are afraid to leaye Him a wish to see everything in New York, | home for fear that he will do himsel, but do not visit the slums. It will not | bodly injury. Motoring apparently | add one thing to your education. 1| apparently agrees with him, as he is | have lived in New York eleven years, extremely hardy and is a great singer. and if there are any slums here I do | Besides his motoring he has made 1 do 1| three tips fo the Pacific coast and re- | wish to know unless I could do some | turn by tf@in. Mr. and Mrs. Levi | sood there. The casual visitor can-| would pajt with him under no condi- ! not. Oniy a morbid and unwholesome | tions, anoffer of $250 having been re- curiosity Would prompt anyone to.seek | fused, it/ 1s sald. such places for the purpose of looking | / at degradation, and you can use your | not kmow where they are nor ‘Thero are| STRMGE KINGDOM OF NEPAL | 8o many important and attractive FHO—— | time to better advantage. ! things to be seen in New York that| Seclided Land at Foot of the Hima- i | | | i you cannot afford to waste your time on unworthy sights. Try to see the | pleasant and valuable -things and| | | leave New York clean its own slums he ancient and interesting little i —hoping that may be soon.” gdom at the foot of the Himalayas It has been reported since that sev- to which the king went for his shoot eral mothers and fathers are gratefu' Is nearer to being an independent ter- to the director for his unexpected a¢-| ritary than any other of the Indian states. { dince the eighteenth century it has . bsen ruled by the Gurkhas, who fur- Telegram That Saved India. vish to the Indian army some of the | In connection with the Durbar, a |/most perfect soldiers in the world. | museum of Mogul relics has been ar- |For practical purposes the country is | ranged, which contains, among other |2lmost as closely secluded from Euro- | illus- | Peans as Thibet, to which in many re- saying/ spects it is akin. The Terai, where King George was lately encamped, is the low-lying jun- gle tract bordering on the Indian plain, a region extraordinarily rich in wild animals, including elephants, the cap- ture of which is a highly organized end valuable industry. liyas Where King George Went vice. { objects, the telegram which trates Montgomery's great | “The electric telegraph saved India.) | This is the famous telegram dispate)- |ed by Brendish on May 1ith, 17, }which gave the news of the’ rebejion |to the north of India, and engbled | Lawrence and Edwardes and Njchol- |son to take steps for the disirma- ment of regiments on the verge of re- | . The maharaja of Nepal, whose death | volt, and to make those brilliaxt ar- | by the way occurred on December 11, | rangements for the relief of Delii by | Was a titular sovereign only, the real ruler being the hereditary prime min- ister, who visited England a 'few months ago. He has the title of ma- haraja, and is entitled to & salute of | which-—and probably by which alone | —the mutiny was crushed out, ard | Delhi once more returned to her | Miss Murph| British allegiance. nineteen guns. One result of the jealous exclusion of foreigners, which the Indian gov- ernment thoroughly respects, is that ery little is known of a great part f Nepal, and that much of the avail~ eble information as to social and eco- nomic conditions is mere guesswork. Fof close upon a hundred years the rulkrs have been our very good friends, and the force of eight thou- sand men headed by Jung Bahadur in the Hutiny was of inestimable service. E | —Westminster Gazette. < State Will Not Pay Tips. *The anti-tipping campaign started | by cemmercial travelers has enlisted a poverful recruit in W. E. Davis, state tuditor of Kansas. Mr. Davis has decreed that Kansas state offi- Bemidji (Corn Fed) Saturda! Night Flatley's Saloon This is the finest roast that was ever brought to -“bar none.” cials, when traveling on the state’s | dusiness, are not entitled to charge ‘he public treasury for tips paid. It cost Kansas just $3,000 in 1911 for ps distributed by state officials, and Mr. Davis hag issued a set of rules for e benefit of employes who travel for the state, in which he says: “Tips or gratuities are recognitions of special service, not an actual and necessary expense for the service itself and will not he allowed.” The controllér of the treasury ot the United Stafes, on the other hand, has ruled that tips are a necessary incident of travel and are properly collectible from the publie funds, Value of History. Old wrongs are so hard to root up that every man sometimes becomes impatient and indignant and rebelli- ous, except the man who knows and has long pondered in the very slow ascent of human society to every high#t level that it has reached. His- torical knowledge is got only by con- siderable labor. Any good man who loves his fellows, when he locks out over the world and sees' it as it is, is pretty certain at times to accept some revolutionary plan unless he have a pretty good historical perspec- tive—World’s Work. Proverb Amplified. | “The pen,” saild the ready-made philosopher, “is mightier than the || sword.” “So 1t 18,” replled the Chicago beef | baron; “especially if you have refer- ence to a cattle pen.” Advantage of Truth. “When one has no design: but to speak the plain truth, he may say a great deal in a very narrpw compass.” —Steele. 5 Love Must Be Present. | A crowd is not company. Faces are but a gallery of pictures, where there 18 no love, and talk is but a tinkling cymbal.—Francis Bacon. - ) BEM| “LIMIT? [ SHORT WEIGHTS Indianapolisfian Finds Dumbbell That I8 it Ounces Less Than g Branded. Dr. W, F.hg, assistant secretary of the state jrd of health, has found what he ter{“the limit”. in- short weights. Hgrote to a sporting goods housefew days ago to buy some dumbly for his daughter, and in “heftingd pair found that one ‘was lighter f the other. He called the attentiojf the salesman to his placed on of the brand\weight. law,” sald owner was recelved frorpis price tor the slave, ship to the fer. health and gength until he escaped. dianapolis Névs: Confection Was Wasted on j Miss Murphys of the hippogin the menagerie. sons, as wellas “the kids,” laughed. crush the companied I two lads. : Snyder tidled the hippo’s chin wit! get a permitto give the lions catnip.’ | dpice of Life. One way ‘¢ ironing ‘out- domesti Igal Judge.” tomac, not f with his wif¢ an aunt of Paul Wil- etach, who mide the dramatic version of “Thais,” wen he drafted the con- ptitution and by-laws of the Mutual Help associatn, retails the New York Bun, in mentifning the incident. “Everybodyé business but my own,” was the mottdof the association. Un- der the head “Declaration of Pur- pose,” appead this paragraph: “The memijers of this association, recognizing tjat there are realms of Indecision an{ irresolution difficult for the single mpd to grasp, penetrate and fully exgore, have formed an as- pociation for {he specific purpose that the individu{l members may have the advantage of every other mem- ber’s opinion/on all conceivable gifies- tions affecting his or her personal wel- fare, believirg that by so doing they will add th¢ variety which is the spice of life None but the Best. store. foh my back” he said. “One of the porus plasters?” plasters. Atlanta Jour DAILY Pldussn. disoovery afthe dumbbells were |20d people whoido not take the paper generally read their neighbor’s so your want alance and weighed, and one fourfo be four ounces short “I don't bfve the misbranding could be hanyd under the pure food Ing, “but Isidor Wulf- side of the s} all the time developed him on one §e only and that the able to get full value and that as [result the slaves were shifted reguljy from one side of the In this way, Ben- Hur was endled to maintain rugged | WANTED —Competent girl for gen-| “Since dudbells are used for phy- sical developfient, a pair ought to be | .__ v S et e s S of equal wejht, in order to balance | WANTED—Competent girl for gen- the developntnt,” said Dr. King.—In- ut Bl Snyder, the Keeper, Said the It iz throwine money away, accord- ing to Rilk Snyder, head keeper of the Central park )menagerie, to feed a keeper was flicited after he had | Apply Nicolett Hotel. tossed a beatiful mince pie into the ~ =~ = yawning moth of Miss Murphy, one FOR SALE.—Thoroughbred St. He\-‘ The hippopad been promised the | of -drivers. pie by a majon the upper West side | fully a weekago. He said he wanted Hunting. | “the Kids” * have a laugh. When h gulped the pie down yesterday nfie than a score of per- It was a pnventional 30 cent pie, | but Miss Myphy looked more impor- tant than 30cents when she began to licacy in her seesawing jaws. Accolling to the_man who car- ried the piefo the menagerie he had soaked it w(l in brandy. He was ac. the edge of e pie, and as she opened her mouth, ¥ sent the whole thing in at once, as | it were a straw hat. “Some bug in this town!” said the keeper. “A foman came here yester- day and wated to know if she could difficulties w# originated by the late Vaughan Kespr, author of “The Prod- e was living at Guns- ton, an old cdonial estate on the Po- from Mount Vernon, I { t ‘The Pionecer Want Ads 0ASH witH aoPY . | 14 oent per word per lssue 5 Regular charge rate 1.cent per word per insertion. No ad taken for less than 15 cents. Phone 31 HOW THOSE WANT ADS DO THE BUSINESS | * They tell what you have to sell to everybody in Bemidji. 2 The Ploneer goes everywhere 8o that everyone has a neighbor who takes it ad gets to them all. 3 15 Cent a Word Is All It Costs Can’t Lose Much by Taking a Chance HELP WANTED E. W. Hannah, 513 12th street.| and temperate’ habits, who can| roomed cottage, 1219 Bel. Ave. speak, read and write the Engligh | Inauire 1221 Beltrami. language. For information ap-|FOR RENT—3 room house, 504 3rd .| Dly to Recruiting Office at Schroe-| St. Apply Frank Lane’s Family der Building, Bemidji, or 217 Tor- \ Liquor Store. rey Building, Duluth, Minn. | FOR RENT—Two fur shed rooms at | 917 fiinnesota Ave. . Phone 164. 'FOR RENT.—Furnisheq rooms with | - bath, 417 Minn. avenue. - eral housework; good wages. W. W. Brown, 700 Minnesota Ave. FOR SALE—2 frame building, Be-| eral house work. Mrs. J. O. Har- iy | midji Steam Laundry. . ris; 703 Bemidji.’ : : e ANTED AT ONCE.—Man to take FOR RENT.—Five room house. In- care or rent small farm. Inquire| _Quire of A. Klein. ¢ J. P. Lahr. | —_— % % | MISCELLANEOUS | WANTED-Pianc player. AQAress: | sossmsncostoomsonomoe oo ienr Box 191, Baudette, . Minn. | WANTED—Dining and sleeping car | conductors $75-$125. Bxperience | unnecessary, we teach you, write, Dining Car World, 125 W. Van; ‘Buren, Chicago. FOR SALE I have about 100 cords of poplar| no? Call at second hand etore, 0dd Fellows Bldg. | WANTED.—Orders for knit and| nard pups and dogs. $10 up. Best Telephoae 325. P. O 625. mauire R. G. EGUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand | | furniture. 0dd Fellows building, | FOR SALE—Hay 50 ceuts per bale,| acrosa from postofiice, phone 128 FOR S Bemidji for- sale. Patterson, Nymore. {116 3rd St HERE IS COMFORT FOR SPECTACLE WEARERS We will Guarantee THAT THE Apex Temple |. WILL NOT CUT OR CHAFE THE EARS They can be applied to your lenses while you wait son might tafthe case.” Artrannsrnnrronessnnesenesrenccenoccoccen | ['home 551. | Dr. King falled that when Ben.|WANTED—For U. S. Army—Able- | Hur was a on the Roman galley | bodled unmarried mien between FOR RENT he represeny to the overseer that| ages of 18 and 35; citizens of the| ~—~—~— | 1 ’ keepinZ a slave chained to one | United States, of good character [FOR . RENT.—Newly decorated 3'!.A u 11N¢ of ‘Opical Goods, ~ INCLUDING COLORED GLASS- ES, BROKEN LENSE DUPLICAT - ED AND SPECTACLE REPAIRS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. |Geo, T, Baker & Co. MANUFACTURING JEWELERS NEAR THE LAKE hippo on pies especially on the mince [ Wood for sale cheap at $2.00 a cord. ] WANTED TO TRADE—What nuvef variety. Thj observation by _the |Delivered to any part of the city. | you to trade for new standard pia- ry d I-2 Cent a Word---Cash crochieted bed spreads. Address Box 385 Box 17, Nymore, Minn.,, Phone ! g c | Special Sale of Silk Pefficoats, Friday and Saturday February 9th and 10th. Special § $2.95 é sm Al New 1912 Silk Petticoats Such a variety a woman may have for § $2.95! Gay colored messalines, soft and shimmering. Persians in rich colorings, or art Blacks and White’s, also rich striped atfairs and SilkJersey Top for evening wear. | well made, quite new and uncommonly good for $2.95. Uncle Rasberry walked into a drug “Gimme one o’ dem plasters “No, 1 don't want one o’ de pores’ I want one o' de Des'."— '207 3rd St. Regular $4.00, $4.50 and $5.00 values. _T. J. CRANE & CO. Bemidji, Minn. What was cards for or At Home At the Bemidiji Pioneer Office, this crowded even more than it now is. Twenty some odd styles from which to select. about out “plate free” 200 proposition. = ADIES KNEW in store for them in the way of engraved place would be Ask i £ | | o R ) e -~ £ ) U

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